November-December 2007

Green Certified

In the $12 billion-a-year “green building” industry, a seal of approval can be obtained when a project includes water efficient landscaping, innovative wastewater technologies, and water-use reduction fixtures.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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“It was energy and water conservation–based, so when building and energy codes caught up with those alternative options in that program, the city council instructed the staff to put together a full-blown green building program,” says Elizabeth Vasatka, the environmental coordinator for Boulder’s Office of Environmental Affairs.

The program was implemented in 1996 solely for new residential construction. It was updated in 2001 to include remodeling, and green attributes within the construction were expanded.  The amount of points needed for each factor was increased, and the larger a building was constructed, the more environmental attributes that had to be included.

“Five-hundred-square-foot residential building projects trigger green points and then no matter how big it is, the program taps out at 300 points,” Vasatka says.

Boulder’s program differs from the USGBC.

“When we put ours in place, there was no USGBC yet,” Vasatka says. “They came out just for commercial, and we were just residential. Over the past three years, they’ve been piloting their LEED program for homes. The city is not a LEED home provider.

“We weren’t necessarily interested in LEED when it first came out, because it was just for new construction and the majority of our permits are for remodels and additions,” she adds. “Now we are updating our green point code and are looking at the LEED process and LEED for home structures to see what we can implement and potentially streamline our process.”

LEED is penetrating the marketplace and encompasses “amazing expertise,” Vasatka acknowledges.

“They’ve been working on the program for a long time, so we are definitely looking at how some of the elements of that program and Energy Star could potentially help us with our updates,” she adds.

Boulder has an affordable housing ordinance with what Vasatka says includes stringent development regulations and standards.

“We have basically built out,” she says. “We are really intentional about how the community looks and feels. There is a lot of effort put into planning and building. Our community is pretty dense, but people would like it to be more dense.

“We have height regulations because we have amazing western views. There are regulations on water conservation and stormwater. Boulder’s regulations could potentially be more stringent than those at the federal and state levels because we are definitely sustainable-minded.

“We’ve been wanting to put a commercial green building code on the books, and that’s in process as well,” Vasatka says. “On the whole, the community has developed in a pretty sustainable manner.”

With respect to water-efficient measures, Boulder factors in xeriscaping and drip irrigation for the exterior of a residence and low-flow faucets, toilets, and Energy Star appliances on the inside.

Social Responsibility in Vermont
In Vermont, a green building certification program there ties in to the USGBC, but with a local twist.  The voluntary Green Building Certification program in Vermont is jointly operated by Building for Social Responsibility—called Vermont Builds Greener—and the USGBC’s LEED for homes. The program uses LEED for its Homes scoring system with a few Vermont requirements, such as land-use and development criteria.

“LEED for Homes says build Energy Star and go beyond,” says Jeff Gephart. “The services to build Energy Star are available at no charge in Vermont through Efficiency Vermont—a statewide energy efficiency utility—and then there are services relative to the certification of the joint certification of Vermont Builds Greener and LEED for homes that gets layered on top of that.”

While the LEED for Homes pilot project has been operative for about two years, the Vermont Builds Greener program predates it by about a year, Gephart notes.

“Building for Social Responsibility had no funding available for significant marketing in program support materials, so it was not well known,” he says. “It was actually fairly well known in the green building community because of how aggressive the scorecard was. A lot of the things the USGBC has in its score card appear to have initially come from their examination of Vermont Builds Greener, particularly the home-size analysis and point scoring component.”

The program has become well received in Vermont. The state has had more than 200 builders and architects attend recent trainings, and while Gephart says that may not seem like much on the face of it, he points out that Vermont is a relatively small state.

“We believe there is more of a market for it here,” says Gephart. “There is a lot of interest in the architectural community and a fair amount of interest in the building community, but on a percentage basis, the interest is significantly smaller on the builder’s side than on the architect’s side. There’s a fairly significant and growing interest on the consumer side that to a degree is driving the builder’s side of it.”

Water efficiency isn’t as big a focus in the northeast compared to other areas, Gephart notes.

“We’ve done trainings that have included the information about the LEED for Homes points available for drip irrigation and other actions. That’s not really a component that most people are looking for help with up here—where we pay more attention to water usage is in the area where energy is associated with it, relative to heating the water or reclaiming heat from that heated water.

“What we value more here is how you reduce the amount of heating of water that you need. Can you reclaim waste heat from that water with a GFX [graywater heat recovery system]? We also want to make sure the showerheads and the faucet aerators are low-flow and that the water heating is efficient to begin with. All of those are more of a focus here from a practical and reality standpoint where we are not the dry climate that say Austin, Texas, has.”

Gephart says Vermont officials are trying to buck the trend in the United States of “bigger is better” when it comes to building homes, such as the “mini-mansions.”

“Resource use increases the larger you go,” he says. “That’s something we urge people to think about very early on in the process is designing something that works, something that is right for the usage, but not making it too big. Figure out what’s the appropriate size and how to configure it so we can do more with less.”

Developers are looking at green building from a few standpoints: one being whether they can charge more to use better products to cover costs, and the other is if they can institute green building techniques without increasing the cost, or even by decreasing it, says Gephart. He points out that some green initiatives being rolled into new construction is not as much an attachment to builders’ interest in improved home efficiency as much as interest in reduced liability and fewer callbacks.

“This system of engineered trade-offs enables us to get far more efficient, far more robust homes from the standpoint of prevention of problems with mold, mildew, and moisture without increasing costs,” he says.

“If we can get to that and also appropriately size our heating systems and avoid a cooling system in Vermont, we can probably save some money that could be applied to other features that may be harder to acquire without increasing costs on the green side.”

Development, being a profit-based endeavor, is embracing green building for many reasons, note certification officials throughout the US.

“The industry has simply begun to accept green building as better building, as quality control for builders and designers, and as providing a better product for the building owners at the end,” says Morgan. “There are national development companies that are doing everything they can do and have found that what they get is a better building that operates more efficiently, requires less maintenance, and is leased more quickly, and all of the initial investment in green building is paid back in less than a year through energy and water savings.”

Boulder’s program has been in place for a decade, so everyone has had time to adapt to it, Vasatka points out.

“With any major change or additional requirements on the building community there is always resistance involved,” she says. “But since the Green Points program was implemented, we’ve been able to foster a strong rebuilding community and have a strong industry here. Designers and builders are creating zero-energy homes. We have a lot of folks who really want to see a certain level of energy efficiency regulated.

“We have energy professionals and green building professionals who would like us to regulate at a much higher level than we’re doing right now, since our community signed on to the Kyoto Protocol in 2002 and the city council adopted a climate action plan in 2006.”

In terms of the cost of building green, Imes says Wisconsin’s program managers did not want to perpetuate the myth that building green costs more or results in any compromises of comfort, quality, or durability.

“Some of our best opinion leaders on that have been some of our businesses,” he says. “We work with Veridian Homes, which is the largest home builder in the state. For years, they’ve built all of their homes to the Green Built home standard, and they’ll say it didn’t cost them anything more. It was an opportunity to think differently about how they were building.

“What impressed me was they brought in their suppliers, different contractors, and sales and marketing people and really integrated this to the company. It didn’t cost them more, yet it got them quite a bit of distinction in the marketplace.”

Vasatka maintains that while some green building initiatives may cost a developer and builder more at the onset and while it is the consumer who will reap the benefits in higher energy efficiency with more stable utility costs, “They can market their buildings and get a higher price.”

 It’s been proven that a green structure increases in value in the marketplace much faster than a conventionally built structure, Vasatka says.

“It’s really a smarter way to build,” she adds. “It takes all levels of actions, programs, and mandates to make sure everyone’s involved. It only makes sense to secure an energy-stable future for the US and the world, so I think it’s the right thing to do and makes a lot of business sense.”

Gephart notes a growing awareness throughout the country as to the “impact of our building and development decisions and the impact on the planet.

“Everything from the escalating costs of fuels to the increase in the coverage of climate change in the media is having an impact,” he says. “We saw an era where a lot of the interest and the shift toward greenness was driven in part from an air-quality fear standpoint. We had the years of mold headlines that increased awareness. A number of these factors have come together to make people more interested in it, and as it becomes a little better understood, the fear that this is going to cost an arm and a leg has somewhat diminished.”

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When the USGBC launched its LEED rating system seven years ago, it had 573 member companies. Now, there are more than 9,000.

“This definitely is a growing field, and we’re hoping it will get better,” says Holowka. “We’re hoping one day we will put ourselves out of business, because one day it won’t be green building—it will just be the way it is done.”

Author's Bio: Journalist Carol Brzozowski lives in Coral Springs, FL.

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